(Excluding Reviews of Individual Books and Conference Papers) 1. Bristol

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

(Excluding Reviews of Individual Books and Conference Papers) 1. Bristol Thesis, book, and other publications (excluding reviews of individual books and conference papers) 1. Bristol society in the later eighteenth century with special reference to the handling by computer of fragmentary historical sources, University of Oxford D.Phil. thesis, 1985. 2. (with R.J.P. Kain) The cadastral map in the service of the state: a history of property mapping, Chicago, University of Chicago Press, 1992. Winner of the 1992 Nebenzahl prize. 3. Economy and society in eighteenth-century English towns: Bristol in the 1770s, in Urban historical geography: recent progress in Britain and Germany, ed. D. Denecke and G. Shaw, Cambridge Studies in Historical Geography 10, Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 1988: 109–24. 4. Assessed taxes as a source for the study of urban wealth: Bristol in the later eighteenth century, Urban History Yearbook 1988: 31–48. 5. Work, family and household: women in nineteenth-century Vadstena, Geografiska Annaler series B 70,3, 1988: 335–55. 6. Swedish cadastral mapping 1628–1700: a neglected legacy, Geographical Journal 156,1, 1990: 62–9. 7. Nationalism in the USSR: focus on Estonia, Geography Review 4,4, 1991: 20-3. 8. Question and answer (critical guide to essay writing), Geography Review 4,2, 1990: 17–19. 9. Question and answer, Geography Review 4,4, 1991: 17–19. 10. Question and answer, Geography Review 5,2, 1991:18–19. 11. Question and answer, Geography Review 5,4, 1992: 19-21. 12. Question and answer, Geography Review 6,1, 1992: 9–11. 13. Question and answer, Geography Review 6,5, 1993: 9–11. 14. Question and answer, Geography Review 7,2, 1993: 10–12. 15. Question and answer, Geography Review 8,1, 1994: 10–12. 16. Question and answer, Geography Review 9,4, 1996: 9–12. 17. Question and answer, Geography Review 10,1, 1996: 6–8. 18. Question and answer, Geography Review 10,3, 1997: 7–9. 19. Question and answer, Geography Review 11,1, 1997: 8–9. 20. Question and answer, Geography Review 11,2, 1997: 10-12. 21. Question and answer, Geography Review 11,5, 1998: 10–12. 22. Question and answer, Geography Review 12,1 1998: 14–16. 23. Question and answer, Geography Review 12,2 1998: 7–10. 24. Question and answer, Geography Review 13,1 , 1999: 7–9. 25. Question and answer, Geography Review 13,2, 1999: 6–8. 26. (with H.G. Series) The geography of world health, Geography Review 5,1, 1992: 12–16. 27. The Nordic countries: reluctant Europeans? Geography Review 5,5, 1992: 35–40. 28. Less reluctant Europeans? guest editorial, Geography Review 6,1, 1992: n.p. 29. McKeesport, Pennsylvania: centre of Swedish publishing in mid-Atlantic America, Geografiska Annaler series B 74,1, 1992: 31–56. 30. Exploring the past: investigations in historical geography: part 1: urban geography, Geography Review 6,1, 1992: 12–16. 31. Exploring the rural past: investigations in historical geography: part 2: rural geography, Geography Review 6,4, 1993: 21–4. 32. Geography, geographers, and the New Dictionary of National Biography, Journal of Historical Geography 19,4, 1993: 448–52. 33. Review article on historical cartography, Geographical Journal 159,2, 1993: 228–9. 34. The Royal Society of Arts and the New Dictionary of National Biography, RSA Journal 141 (no.5444), 1993: 828–9. 35. The Swedish-American press in McKeesport, Pennsylvania: new evidence and new perspectives, Geografiska Annaler series B 76,1, 1994: 59–61. 36. Agricultural and land use maps, in H. Wallis and A. McConnell eds., Historians' guide to early British maps, London, Royal Historical Society, 1994: 70–1. 37. The map collections of the colleges of the University of Oxford, in H. Wallis and A. McConnell eds., Historians' guide to early British maps, London, Royal Historical Society, 1994: 295–316. 38. Recreating our past: geography and the New Dictionary of National Biography, Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers NS 19, 1994: 225–7. 39. Shedding the Soviet legacy, Geographical Review 7,4, 1994: 38–41. 40. Richard Horwood's map of London: eighteenth-century cartography and the Society of Arts, RSA Journal 142 (no 5455), 1994: 49–51. 41. Richard Horwood's map of London: eighteenth-century cartography and the Society of Arts, London Topographical Society Newsletter 40, 1995: 8–10. 42. Ideal types and otherness: migrants and citydwellers in the nineteenth-century British Isles, Journal of Urban History 22,4, 1996: 524–30. 43. Nationality and dictionaries of national biography, in I. McCalman ed., National biographies and national identities, Canberra, Australian National University Press, 1996: 63–73. 44. The New Dictionary of National Biography: revising a well loved national institution, Genealogists' Magazine 25,9 1997: 358–61. 45. Geographers, the national memory, and the Dictionary of National Biography, Royal Geographical Society (History and Philosophy of Geography) Newsletter 1997: 5–7. 46. Egypt, the near East and the New Dictionary of National Biography, The Association for the Study of Travel in Egypt and the Near East: Notes and Queries 5 1999: 21–3. 47. Typologies of urban history, Journal of Urban History 25,4, 1999: 536–46. 48. Swedish migrants in McKeesport, Pennsylvania: did the Great American Dream come true?, Journal of Historical Geography 26,2, 2000: 239–72. 49. Making and remaking urban culture: geography and identity in the early modern British town, Journal of Urban History 28,3, 2002: 352–9. 50. The geography of biography, the biography of geography: rewriting the Dictionary of National Biography, Journal of Historical Geography 30, 2004: 531–51. 51. Travelling hopefully, DNB Newsletter 8 2003: 4–5. 52. Abdy, Edward Strutt, (1791–1846) in H.C.G. Matthew and Brian Harrison, eds, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford, Oxford University Press, 2004. 53. Adams, John, (1670–1738) in ibid. 54. (with C. A. Harris) Agnew, Sir James Willson, (1815–1901) in ibid. 55. (with Ian Adams) Ainslie, John, (1745–1828) in ibid. 56. Ainsworth, William Francis, (1807–1896) in ibid. 57. Allen, Thomas, (1803–1833) in ibid. 58. Andrews, John, (fl. 1766–1800) in ibid. 59. Angas, George French, (1822–1886) in ibid. 60. Arrowsmith, Aaron, the elder, (1750–1823) in ibid. 61. Arrowsmith, John, (1790–1873) in ibid. 62. (with Kenneth Mason) Austen, Henry Haversham Godwin-, (1834–1923) in ibid. 63. Baedeker, Karl, (1801–1859) in ibid. 64. (with Stanley Lane-Poole) Baikie, William Balfour, (1825–1864) in ibid. 65. Baines, (John) Thomas, (1820–1875) in ibid. 66. Baird, Andrew Wilson, (1842–1908) in ibid. 67. (with J. H. Andrews) Bald, William, (1789–1857) in ibid. 68. ( with Sidney Lee) Balfour, Francis, (d. 1816) in ibid. 69. (with A. G. E. Jones) Balleny, John, (c. 1770–1842) in ibid. 70. Bankes, William John, (1786–1855) in ibid. 71. (with Ronald Bayne) Barker, Collet, (1784–1831) in ibid. 72. (with Arthur H. Grant) Barker, William Burckhardt, (1810–1856) in ibid. 73. Barrow, John, (fl. 1725–1785) in ibid. 74. (with Anon) Batty, Robert, (1762–1849) in ibid. 75. (with M. J. Wise) Beaver, Stanley Henry, (1907–1984) in ibid. 76. Beck, Henry Charles, (1902–1974) in ibid. 77. (with Howard Temperley) Beecroft, John, (1790–1854) in ibid. 78. Bell, James, (1769–1833) in ibid. 79. Bent, (James) Theodore, (1852–1897) in ibid. 80. (with A. S. Bicknell) Bicknell, Herman, (1830–1875) in ibid. 81. Birch, Jonathan, (1783–1847) in ibid. 82. (with A. G. E. Jones) Biscoe, John, (1794–1843) in ibid. 83. (with Thompson Cooper) Blakeway, John Brickdale, (1765–1826) in ibid. 84. (with Thompson Cooper) Bleeck, Arthur Henry, (1829–1877) in ibid. 85. (with T. F. Henderson) Blennerhasset, Harman, (1764–1831) in ibid. 86. Boate, Gerard, (Gerrit Boot) (1604–1650) in ibid. 87. (with Alexander Gordon) Bolingbroke, Henry, (1785–1855) in ibid. 88. Booth, Sir Felix, first baronet (1775–1850) in ibid. 89. Borgard, Albert, (1659–1751) in ibid. 90. (with A. J. Arbuthnot) Bourdillon, James Dewar, (1811–1883) in ibid. 91. (with G. T. Bettany) Bowles, William, (1705–1780) in ibid. 92. (with G. C. Boase) Brady, Sir Antonio, (1811–1881) in ibid. 93. (with Thompson Cooper) Brayley, Edward Wedlake, (1773–1854) in ibid. 94. (with F. V. James) Brenchley, Julius Lucius, (1816–1873) in ibid. 95. Brereton, John, (1571–1619) in ibid. 96. Brereton, Thomas, (1782–1832) in ibid. 97. Breton, Adela Catherine, (1849–1923) in ibid. 98. Broke, Sir Arthur de Capell, (formerly Arthur Supple) (1791–1858) in ibid. 99. Brown, John, (1797–1861) in ibid. 100. (with Thomas Seccombe) Brown, Robert, (1842–1895) in ibid. 101. (with Richard Garnett) Browne, William George, (1768–1813) in ibid. 102. (with T. F. Henderson) Buchanan, John Lanne, (fl. 1768–1828) in ibid. 103. Bullock, William, (1780–1843) in ibid. 104. (with Stanley Lane-Poole) Burckhardt, Johann Ludwig, (1784–1817) in ibid. 105. (with E. I. Carlyle) Burgess, Joseph Thomas, (1828–1886) in ibid. 106. Buxton, Edward North, (1840–1924) in ibid. 107. Buxton, Sir (Thomas) Fowell, third baronet (1837–1915) in ibid. 108. By1ot, Robert, (fl. 1583–1643) in ibid. 109. Caddy, Florence, (1820–1898) in ibid. 110. (with Gordon Goodwin) Cadell, William Archibald, (1775–1855) in ibid. 111. (with H. M. Chichester) Calvert, James Snowden, (1825–1884) in ibid. 112. (with Stanley Lane-Poole) Campbell, Donald, (1751–1804) in ibid. 113. (with John Westby-Gibson) Cape, William Timothy, (1806–1863) in ibid. 114. (with J. R. Magrath) Capes, William Wolfe, (1834–1914) in ibid. 115. (with G. C. Boase) Came, John, (1789–1844) in ibid. 116. (with T. F. Henderson) Carr, Sir John, (1772–1832) in ibid. 117. Carteret, Philip, (1733–1796) in ibid. 118. Cary, John, (1755–1835) in ibid. 119. Chale, William, (1718–1781) in ibid. 120. (with G.
Recommended publications
  • The Rhinehart Collection Rhinehart The
    The The Rhinehart Collection Spine width: 0.297 inches Adjust as needed The Rhinehart Collection at appalachian state university at appalachian state university appalachian state at An Annotated Bibliography Volume II John higby Vol. II boone, north carolina John John h igby The Rhinehart Collection i Bill and Maureen Rhinehart in their library at home. ii The Rhinehart Collection at appalachian state university An Annotated Bibliography Volume II John Higby Carol Grotnes Belk Library Appalachian State University Boone, North Carolina 2011 iii International Standard Book Number: 0-000-00000-0 Library of Congress Catalog Number: 0-00000 Carol Grotnes Belk Library, Appalachian State University, Boone, North Carolina 28608 © 2011 by Appalachian State University. All rights reserved. First Edition published 2011 Designed and typeset by Ed Gaither, Office of Printing and Publications. The text face and ornaments are Adobe Caslon, a revival by designer Carol Twombly of typefaces created by English printer William Caslon in the 18th century. The decorative initials are Zallman Caps. The paper is Carnival Smooth from Smart Papers. It is of archival quality, acid-free and pH neutral. printed in the united states of america iv Foreword he books annotated in this catalogue might be regarded as forming an entity called Rhinehart II, a further gift of material embodying British T history, literature, and culture that the Rhineharts have chosen to add to the collection already sheltered in Belk Library. The books of present concern, diverse in their
    [Show full text]
  • A Diet for a Sensitive Soul: Vegetarianism in Eighteenth-Century Britain
    A Diet for a Sensitive Soul: Vegetarianism in Eighteenth-Century Britain Anita Guerrini While vegetarianism has a long history in Western culture, it reemerged forcefully in late seventeenth- and eighteenth-century Britain. Three main motivations for vegetarianism converged in this period: religious, medical, and moral. In addition, a vegetarian diet entered mainstream medical and popular thought in the works of the physician George Cheyne. By the time of Joseph Ritson's Essay on Abstinence from Animal Food in 1802, however, vegetarianism was about to rejoin the irrational fringe, exemplified in the nineteenth century by Sylvester Graham and his followers. 1 In this essay, I shall focus on three vegetarians of the period: the radical hatter Thomas Tryon (1634-1703), George Cheyne (1671-1743), and the man of letters Joseph Ritson (1752-1803). Cheyne's work, especially his Essay of Health and Long Life (1724) and The English Malady (1733), defined the nascent concept of the sensitive character and explicitly connected it to diet and lifestyle. To Cheyne, a vegetarian diet was preeminently a diet for the sensitive soul. Over the century, the sensitive soul negotiated a path from the overtly religious Tryon to the covertly religious Cheyne to the professedly antireligious Ritson. To each, in addition, vegetarianism was part of a wider critique of contemporary society. Tryon was one of a number of religiously motivated vegetarians in the period following the English Civil War. 2 The context of his ideas can be delineated by examining an earlier
    [Show full text]
  • Texts from De.Wikipedia.Org, De.Wikisource.Org
    Texts from http://www.gutenberg.org/files/13635/13635-h/13635-h.htm, de.wikipedia.org, de.wikisource.org BRITISH AND GERMAN AUTHORS AND Contents: INTELLECTUALS CONFRONT EACH OTHER IN 1914 1. British authors defend England’s war (17 September) The material here collected consists of altercations between British and German men of letters and professors in the first 2. Appeal of the 93 German professors “to the world of months of the First World War. Remarkably they present culture” (4 October 1914) themselves as collective bodies and as an authoritative voice on — 2a. German version behalf of their nation. — 2b. English version The English-language materials given here were published in, 3. Declaration of the German university professors (16 and have been quoted from, The New York Times Current October 1914) History: A Monthly Magazine ("The European War", vol. 1: — 3a. German version "From the beginning to March 1915"; New York: The New — 3b. English version York Times Company 1915), online on Project Gutenberg (www.gutenberg.org). That same source also contains many 4. Reply to the German professors, by British scholars interventions written à titre personnel by individuals, including (21 October 1914) G.B. Shaw, H.G. Wells, Arnold Bennett, John Galsworthy, Jerome K. Jerome, Rudyard Kipling, G.K. Chesterton, H. Rider Haggard, Robert Bridges, Arthur Conan Doyle, Maurice Maeterlinck, Henri Bergson, Romain Rolland, Gerhart Hauptmann and Adolf von Harnack (whose open letter "to Americans in Germany" provoked a response signed by 11 British theologians). The German texts given here here can be found, with backgrounds, further references and more precise datings, in the German wikipedia article "Manifest der 93" and the German wikisource article “Erklärung der Hochschullehrer des Deutschen Reiches” (in a version dated 23 October 1914, with French parallel translation, along with the names of all 3000 signatories).
    [Show full text]
  • Ashhurst, Sir William Henry (1725–1807)
    Osgoode Hall Law School of York University Osgoode Digital Commons Articles & Book Chapters Faculty Scholarship 2004 Biography: Ashhurst, Sir William Henry (1725–1807) Douglas Hay Osgoode Hall Law School of York University, [email protected] Source Publication: Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press, 2004. Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.osgoode.yorku.ca/scholarly_works Part of the Legal Biography Commons Recommended Citation Hay, Douglas C. "Ashhurst, Sir William Henry (1725–1807)." Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Eds. Leslie Stephen, Sidney Lee, and Christine Nicholls. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press, 2004. Web. This Book Chapter is brought to you for free and open access by the Faculty Scholarship at Osgoode Digital Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in Articles & Book Chapters by an authorized administrator of Osgoode Digital Commons. Ashhurst, Sir William Henry (1725–1807),judge by Douglas Hay © Oxford University Press 2004–15 All rights reserved Ashhurst, Sir William Henry (1725–1807), judge, was born on 25 January 1725 at Ashhurst, near Wigan, Lancashire, the third son of Thomas Henry Ashhurst (d. 1744), vice-chancellor of the duchy of Lancaster and recorder of Liverpool and Wigan, who held the Lancashire manors of Dalton, Upholland, and Skelmersdale, and his wife Diana (d. 1786); she was the daughter of Sir Richard Allin, baronet, of Somerleyton, Suffolk, and his wife, Frances Ashurst, and thereby the granddaughter of Sir Henry Ashurst, first baronet (1645–1711). Henry's father was a younger son of Henry Ashurst of Dalton; William Henry's parents were therefore distant cousins. Diana Allin was heir to Sir Henry Ashurst's estates at Waterstock and Emmington, Oxfordshire, which Ashhurst inherited in 1788; his older brother Henry sold the Lancashire estates in 1751.
    [Show full text]
  • Principio Guía: Versículo Para Memorizar: Información Básica Para El Líder: Módulo 1, Unidad 4, Lección 1 La Gran Aventur
    Módulo 1, Unidad 4, Lección 1 La gran aventura del Ejército de Salvación Principio Guía: Dios siempre mueve a Su pueblo a comenzar algo nuevo. Versículo para Memorizar: “Les contó otra parábola: ‘El reino de los cielos es como un grano de mostaza que un hombre sembró en su campo. Aunque es la más pequeña de todas las semillas, cuando crece es la más grande de las hortalizas y se convierte en árbol, de modo que vienen las aves y anidan en sus ramas’”. Mateo 13:31-32 (NVI) Información Básica para el Líder: La historia del inicio del Ejército de Salvación es la historia de Dios haciendo todo nuevo. Esta lección se enfocará en la conversión de Pablo y el llamado de William Booth para mostrar cómo Dios puede usar personas de todo tipo de vida para ser portadores de Su mensaje. En esta lección, pedirá a los jóvenes soldados que estén en silencio y escuchen lo que Dios puede estarles diciendo. Es valioso comenzar a enseñar a los niños en una edad temprana, a escuchar la voz de Dios y darles tiempo para practicar. También puede ser confuso para algunos niños porque, espe- cialmente los más pequeños, son pensadores concretos. Quieren escuchar la voz de Dios en sus oídos. Algunos pueden pensar que no aman realmente a Jesús si no “escuchan” algo. Es importante que estos jóvenes no se desanimen. Principio Guía: Dios siempre mueve a Su pueblo a comenzar algo nuevo. Versículo para Memorizar: Mateo 13:31-32 (NVI) Actividad Qué hacen los niños Preparación Materiales ¡NOS VEMOS!: Los jóvenes soldados IMPACTAR Disponga un espacio abierto responden preguntas en • Ninguno (8-10 minutos) para jugar.
    [Show full text]
  • The Church Act
    The Church Act: The expansion of Christianity or the imposition of moral enlightenment? David Stoneman A Thesis submitted as fulfilment of the requirement for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy, University of New England, Australia, 2011. Abstract The Church Act (1836) redefined and reinvigorated the religious environment in the emerging British colony of New South Wales, which profoundly impacted on its social and political development in a period of rapid population growth. It was a popular measure that has seen Governor Richard Bourke, its principal architect, be remembered as a provider of religious freedom. The simple motivation of the Act to expand Christianity and therefore morality has been complicated by the assertion that it assisted the expansion of a ‘new faith’ called moral enlightenment. This changes the implication of the Act and redefines the motives of the people responsible for its introduction, especially Bourke, by assuming that secular Enlightenment principles overrode Christian objectives. This has provided an ideological superstructure that has been used by some nationalist historians to present a picture of New South Wales colonial life that was fundamentally irreligious verging on atheistic. This has served to diminish the importance of religious thought and belief in the early development of Australia. This thesis argues that the Church Act was conceived to counter various forms of alternative belief and synchronised Christianity, ranging from plebeian ‘folk religion’ to heterodoxical, intellectual Protestantism. It encouraged orthodox Christianity by financially supporting the denominations that had cultural as well as spiritual connections to the majority of the population. The thesis concludes that the Church Act should be categorised as being a product of the ‘Age of Atonement’ not the imposition of moral enlightenment.
    [Show full text]
  • A.C.BRADLEY Ajffd HIS D Ffluefcr Hf Twerl'leth
    A.C.BRADLEY AJffD HIS D fF lUEFCR Hf TWERl'lETH UEMTURY SHAEESÎPEARE CRTTIc is m , BY Katharine Lee« Côûjc;^ K. H. 3. L)3 m V CLAub No. Co^ A Ü C. ^ 0, » t, 3it> DAfE ACQ fife, rtbîr. ProQuest Number: 10107236 All rights reserved INF0RMATION TO ALL USERS The quality of this reproduction is dependent upon the quality of the copy submitted. In the unlikely event that the author did not send a complete manuscript and there are missing pages, these will be noted. Also, if material had to be removed a note will indicate the deletion. uest. ProQuest 10107236 Published by ProQuest LLC(2016). Copyright of the Dissertation is held by the Author. All rights reserved. This work is protected against unauthorized copying under Title 17, United States Code Microform Edition © ProQuest LLC. ProQuest LLC 789 East Eisenhower Parkway P.Q. Box 1346 Ann Arbor, MI 48106-1346 'L SYNOPSIS. This thesis sets out to discuss the criticism of A.C.Bradley (I85I-I935) paying especial attention to twentieth century interpretationsof his work; which, it appears, hear more CrihcAsm relation to the needs of twentieth century^than to the actual dicta of A.C.Bradley. As twentieth century attitudes are not uniform the Introduction shows some of the contradictory elements in the modern picture of Bradley. Chapter 2 summarises Bradley's life and surveys some of his nwn-literary writings as a corrective to twentieth century impressions. Chapter 3 sets out his critical principles so that the main part of the thesis which follows may he hased on some more factual found­ ation than twentieth century opinion.
    [Show full text]
  • “How the Chicken Conquered the World,” Smithsonian Magazine, June 2012
    Bibliography General Sources Adler, Jerry, and Andrew Lawler, “How the Chicken Conquered the World,” Smithsonian Magazine, June 2012. Damerow, Gail. The Chicken Encyclopedia: An Illustrated Reference. Pownal, VT: Storey, 2012. Danaan, Clea. The Way of the Hen: Zen and the Art of Raising Chickens. Guilford, CT: Lyons Press, 2011. Fraser, Evan D. G., and Andrew Rimas. Empires of Food: Feast, Famine, and the Rise and Fall of Civilizations. New York: Free Press, 2010. Gurdon, Martin. Hen and the Art of Chicken Maintenance: Reflections on Keeping Chickens. Guilford, CT: Lyons Press, 2004. Lembke, Janet. Chickens: Their Natural and Unnatural Histories. New York, NY: Skyhorse Pub., 2012. Litt, Robert, and Hannah Litt. A Chicken in Every Yard: The Urban Farm Store's Guide to Chicken Keeping. Berkeley: Ten Speed Press, 2011. Pollan, Michael. The Omnivore's Dilemma: A Natural History of Four Meals. New York: Penguin Press, 2006. Potts, Annie. Chicken. London: Reaktion Books, 2012. Serjeantson, D. Birds. New York: Cambridge University Press, 2009. Smith, Jane S. In Praise of Chickens: A Compendium of Wisdom Fair and Fowl. Guilford, CT: Lyons Press, 2012. Smith, Page, and Charles Daniel. The Chicken Book. Boston: Little, Brown, 1975. Squier, Susan Merrill. Poultry Science, Chicken Culture: A Partial Alphabet. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press, 2011. Troller, Susan, S. V. Medaris, Jane Hamilton, Michael Perry, and Ben Logan. Cluck: From Jungle Fowl to City Chicks. Blue Mounds, WI: Itchy Cat Press, 2011. Willis, Kimberley, and Rob Ludlow. Raising Chickens for Dummies. Hoboken, NJ: Wiley, 2009. Introduction Booth, William. "The Great Egg Crisis Hits Mexico." Washington Post.
    [Show full text]
  • BARDGATE Was Shakespeare a Secret Catholic?
    BARDGATE Was Shakespeare a Secret Catholic? Peter W. Dickson ❦ ANY persons comfortable in the modern tolerant secular culture may recoil from the idea that the genius behind the works attributed to William Shakespeare could be found in his religious orientation, a growing suspicion among scholars who sense that the man from Stratford-on-Avon might have been living a “double life” as a secret Roman Catholic. This discussion about whether the Bard remained inwardly a Catholic while Queen Elizabeth and her regime sought the suppression and execution of large numbers of Catholics (especially after 1581) was until recently confined to the quiet groves of academe. Those scholars of Shakespeare’s works aware of this history (not all are!) usually consider the old Catholic/Protestant argument as too unsavory a topic and are probably happy with the possibility that it may now be too esoteric for a broader audience. The disinclination to probe into the religious issues of the time meshes well with the mania known as “multiculturalism” or the politics of “diversity” which holds that personal identity should be understood in terms of differences arising from physical characteristics––race, gender or sexual orientation––as opposed to what is inside one’s mind. At the same time, these new cultural trends have fueled an egalitarian spirit that encourages the leveling down or unmasking of persons who have served as symbols of greatness in the past. The Bard in this regard has not been spared clini- cal dissection by deconstructionists, feminists, historicists and the like. This new iconoclasm encourages scholars to ask whether he might have been a racist or a sexist toward women as well as being perhaps an anti-Semite, given his portrayal of Shylock in The Merchant of Venice.
    [Show full text]
  • Read Ebook {PDF EPUB} an Inquiry the Nature and Progress Rent, Progress of Which It Is Regulated, Vol
    Read Ebook {PDF EPUB} An Inquiry the Nature and Progress Rent, Progress of Which It Is Regulated, Vol. 7 (Classic Reprint) by Il Malthus R. Malthus Malthus, Thomas Robert. An Inquiry into the Nature and Progress of Rent, and the Principles by which it is Regulated. London: John Murray, Albermarle Street. [A Reprint of Economic Tracts, Edited by Jacob H. Hollander, Johns Hopkins Press, 1903] Repository: University of California. Malthus… Oct 31, 2017 · Malthus, T. R. (1815a). An Inquiry into the Nature and Progress of Rent and the Principles by Which It Is regulated.Author: Yuichiro KawanaPublish Year: 2018[PDF]GENERAL RULES - Home | FEMA.govhttps://www.fema.gov/pdf/nfip/prodmanual200510/03gr.pdffoundation, that is regulated under the community’s floodplain management and building ordinances or laws. NOTE: All references in this manual to manufactured (mobile) homes include tra-vel trailers without wheels. a. Manufactured (Mobile) Homes - New Policies Effective on or After October 1, 1982 To be insurable under the NFIP, a mobile home: Thomas Robert Malthus FRS (/ ˈ m æ l θ ə s /; 13/14 February 1766 – 23 December 1834) was an English cleric, scholar and influential economist in the fields of political economy and demography.. In his 1798 book An Essay on the Principle of Population, Malthus …Born: 13/14 February 1766, Westcott, Surrey, EnglandChildren: 3Died: 23 December 1834 (aged 68), Bath, …Spouse(s): Harriet Eckersall ​(m. 1804)​ Chapter 1 NR222 Flashcards | Quizlethttps://quizlet.com/414754585/chapter-1-nr222-flash-cardsStart studying Chapter 1 NR222. Learn vocabulary, terms, and more with flashcards, games, and other study tools.
    [Show full text]
  • The Athenaeum Press Series
    THE ATHENAEUM PRESS SERIES G. L. KITTREDGE AND C. T. WINCHESTER GENERAL EDITORS Series announcement THE "Athenaeum Press Series" includes the choicest works of Eng­ lish literature in editions carefully prepared for the use of schools, col­ leges, libraries, and the general reader. Each volume is edited by some scholar who has made a special study of an author and his period. The Introductions are biographical and critical. In particular they set forth the relation of the authors to their times and indicate their impor­ tance in the development of litera­ ture. A Bibliography and Notes accompany each volume. Athenaeum Press Series THE SONNETS OF SHAKESPEARE WITH AN INTRODUCTION AND NOTES BY H. C. BEECHING, M.A., D. LITT. BOSTON, U.S.A., AND LONDON GINN & COMPANY, PUBLISHERS 1904 ENTERED AT STATIONERS' HALL COPYRIGHT, 1904 BY H. C. BEECHING ALL RIGHTS RESERVED IV V7^ O AMICIS BALLIOLENSIBVS ANDREAE CECILIO BRADLEY SIDNEIO LEE DE POETA NOSTRO BENE MERENTISSIMIS QVORVM FAVOR HVNC LIBELLVM VNICE PRODVXIT GENITOR 4~ CO (^ 195527 PREFACE This edition of Shakespeare's sonnets was suggested by my friend Mr. A. C. Bradley, Professor of Poetry at Oxford, who was interested in a paper on the subject which I con­ tributed to the Cornhill Magazine in February, 1902. That paper, by the good leave of the publisher, I have used as the basis of the present Introduction ; and the rest of my editorial work has consisted in dividing up the sonnets into groups and annotating them. As there are already before the public not a few editions of Shakespeare's son­ nets by well-known writers, I may be allowed to set out what I conceive to be the peculiarities of this edition.
    [Show full text]
  • What Is National Biography For? Dictionaries and Digital History Philip Carter
    4 WHAT IS NATIONAL BIOGRAPHY FOR? DICTIONARIES AND DIGITAL HISTORY PHILIP CARTER Ask the purpose of national biography and you may be forgiven for thinking this an easier question for previous generations to answer. In June 1900 the original British Dictionary of National Biography (DNB) reached its completion with the publication of a 63rd and final volume— an event hailed as a triumph by reviewers and compilers alike. For the Pall Mall Gazette, this was ‘the best dictionary of home biography possessed of any nation’, while the Athenaeum championed ‘our British lexicographers’ who ‘have had the satisfaction of administering a handsome beating to their most formidable rivals, the Germans’.1 The DNB’s editor at the time was the Elizabethan literary scholar Sidney Lee, who had driven the project on during the 1890s and infused it with an enhanced degree of scholarly rigour. Lee celebrated the Dictionary’s completion in similarly confident fashion, praising an ‘undertaking of exceptional magnitude in the history of publishing’ that was more extensive, coherent, and rapidly produced than ‘cyclopaedias of national 1 Quoted in Keith Thomas, Changing Conceptions of National Biography: TheOxford DNB in Historical Perspective (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2005), 27. doi.org/10.1017/CBO 9780511497582; ‘Dictionary of National Biography. Edited by Sidney Lee—Vol. LXII’, Athenaeum, 14 July 1900, 45, quoted in Juliette Atkinson, Victorian Biography Reconsidered: A Study of Nineteenth-Century ‘Hidden’ Lives (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2010), 231. doi.org/10.1093/ acprof:oso/9780199572137.001.0001. 57 ‘TRUE Biographies of Nations?’ biography abroad’, including those of Belgium, the Netherlands, Sweden, the United States of America, and again Germany.
    [Show full text]